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St. Thomas On Human Nature


St. Thomas on Human Nature
Phil 5314

Instructor: Dr. David Squires
Email: squired@stthom.edu
Office and Hours: by appointment

Course Description

This course is a graduate level introduction to the Thomistic view of the human person consisting of two parts. In the first part, we will read Aristotle’s De Anima and St. Thomas’ commentary on the same, a commentary which inspired Pico de Mirandola to remark that “without Thomas, Aristotle would be mute.” In the second part, we will read selections from St. Thomas’s Treatise on the Human Being.

Greek Reading Group(s)

If there is sufficient interest, there will be an optional Greek grammar and/or optional Greek reading group that will meet once a week to practice Greek grammar or read Aristotle’s De Anima.

Required Texts

You are encouraged to read in the original languages, but are required to have these translations on hand:

1) The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation, Volume One. Edited by Jonathan Barnes, Princeton University Press: Princeton, 1995.

ISBN13: 978-0-691-01650-4

2) Robert Pasnau’s translation of Aquinas’s Commentary on the De Anima, ISBN-13: 978-0-300-07420-4

3) Alfred Freddoso’s translation of the Summa Theologiae: https://www3.nd.edu/~afreddos/summa-translation/toc.htm

Assignments:

Term Paper (70%): Each student must submit a 15-20 pp. argumentative term paper for this course by xx/x/2025. A proposal of your paper must be submitted by xx/xx/2025. Failure to submit your proposal by the deadline will result in a lowered participation score. Your term paper should engage secondary literature relevant to your proposed paper topic, and your proposal should provide a short bibliography of the secondary literature you intend to use. You are responsible for tracking down and making proper use of this material.

Participation (30%): This class will be run as a short lecture followed by a directed discussion of the assigned readings. Students are expected to attend and participate in each class meeting by generating questions about and analysis of the assigned readings. Additionally, each student must post 2-5 substantive questions and/or talking points to the discussion board on Blackboard before 11:59pm the day before each class. The board will not be used for discussion, but only as a place to share your questions/talking points with the instructor and other students in the class before the next day’s discussion. Your questions/talking points should pertain to the assigned readings. The instructor may call upon students to further elucidate their posts in class in order to facilitate discussion.

Academic Policies:

Disabilities: If you have a disability that may require special assistance, please contact Counseling Services/Disability Services, which is located on the second floor of Crooker Center.

Academic Integrity: Students are expected to comply with the University of St. Thomas’s Academic Integrity policy (A.02.11). You are in graduate school. The penalty for academic dishonesty of any kind is a failing grade for the course, as well as my recommendation to the Chair that you be dismissed from the program.

Classroom Etiquette: Please avoid any distracting activities during class.

Recording Policy: Do not produce audio or video recordings of classroom lectures or discussions, unless you have permission from the university and have made this permission clear to me.  If you have permission to record, do not put the content online.

Tentative Schedule:

Part 1: Aristotle’s De Anima and St. Thomas’s Commentary on the same

Class 1 (8/19) SLDA 1.1-5

Class 2 (8/21) SLDA 1.6-9

Class 3 (8/26) SLDA 1.10-14

Class 4 (8/28) SLDA 2.1-4

Class 5 (9/2) SLDA 2.5-9

Class 6 (9/4) SLDA 2.10-13

Class 7 (9/9) SLDA 2.14-18

Class 8 (9/11) SLDA 2.19-24

Class 9 (9/16) SLDA 3.1-4

Class 10 (9/18) SLDA 3.5-9

Class 11 (9/23) SLDA 3.10-13

Class 12 (9/25) SLDA 3.14-18

Part 2: Treatise on the Human Being

Class 13 (9/30) ST 75.1-4

Class 14 (10/2) ST 75.5-7

Class 15 (10/7) ST 76.1-4

Class 16 (10/9) ST 76. 5-8

Class 17 (10/14) No Class

Class 18 (10/16) ST 77

Class 19 (10/21) ST 78

Class 20 (10/23) ST  79.1-6

Class 21 (10/28) ST 79.7-13

Class 22 (10/30) ST 80 and 81

Class 23 (11/4) ST 82 and 83

Class 24 (11/6) ST 84

Class 25 (11/11) ST 85

Class 26 (11/13) ST 86 and 87

Class 27 (11/18) ST 88 and 89

Class 28 (11/20) TBD

Class 29 (11/25) TBD

Class 30 (11/27) No Class